Chatoyant College, Book 12: R...

By clarekrmiller

1.9K 125 17

NOTE BEFORE YOU READ THIS: This is book 12 in an ongoing series! Books 1 and 2 are available in their entiret... More

Prologue: Awake
Chapter 1: The Morning
Chapter 2: Vision
Chapter 3: Never Before
Chapter 4: Stories Untold
Chapter 5: A Real Conversation
Chapter 6: The Long Story
Chapter 7: Complications
Chapter 8: Okay
Chapter 9: Free Food
Chapter 10: The Guard
Chapter 11: Distraction
Chapter 12: Coming True
Chapter 13: The Djanaea Story
Chapter 14: Morning Light
Chapter 15: Breakfast
Chapter 16: The Sisters
Chapter 18: Hiding in the Library
Chapter 19: Study Date
Chapter 20: Springtime
Chapter 21: Counselor
Chapter 22: Meeting
Chapter 23: In Nature
Chapter 24: Being a Student
Chapter 25: Sharing Notes
Chapter 26: Losing Control
Chapter 27: Progress
Chapter 28: Smoothing
Chapter 29: Bargains
Chapter 30: The Way It Was
Chapter 31: Pass It On
Chapter 32: Changing Attitudes
Chapter 33: The Orchard
Chapter 34: Tell Me
Chapter 35: The Practical Portion
Chapter 36: Candles
Chapter 37: The Flame
Chapter 38: Settling In
Chapter 39: Touch
Chapter 40: Questions
Chapter 41: I've Done Everything
Chapter 42: Incomplete Messages
Chapter 43: The Best Outcome
Chapter 44: Dorms
Chapter 45: So Many Choices
Patreon!
Chapter 46: Sayer
Chapter 47: The Corner Room
Chapter 48: April Showers
Chapter 49: Soaking
Chapter 50: Squelch
Chapter 51: Connected to Nature
Chapter 52: Fun in the Rain
Chapter 53: Soft Afternoon
Chapter 54: The Open Gates
Chapter 55: Trust
Chapter 56: The Tree
Chapter 57: Gone
End of Book 12
Now available on Smashwords!
Book 13

Chapter 17: That Christy Girl

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By clarekrmiller

Dawn accepted the book cart from Emi and rolled it into a corner where she would be out of the way. There she piled half the books on the floor and started sorting the other half, using the emptied shelves to keep her sections organized.

Books on religion and philosophy went on the upper left. Books on history went on the upper right. Books on or in foreign languages went on the lower left, and books on science went on the lower right. Other types of books were less common and went in between wherever it made sense.

She still hadn't memorized a full map of the library and its organization using the Dewey Decimal System, but after the last six months working here and shelving books at least once a week, she had a good sense of where different types of books went. Not all the library workers took the time to go through all the books and organize them before starting to shelve them (some people went to a section first and tried to find the books on the cart that went in that section, and Dawn was pretty sure she'd seen Derwen go one book at a time, pushing the cart wherever the next book on the cart went), but Dawn felt this was the fastest and easiest way to get all the shelving done.

When she had it all organized, she found herself with three fiction books balanced on top of the cart, so she went to that section first. It was the most convenient anyway, since it was near the front desk. Just as she was slotting the last one back into its correct spot on the shelf, she heard someone behind her clear her throat and say, "Hey."

She turned around, curious. Yes, the person—a heavyset woman with blonde, curly hair who was vaguely familiar—was looking at Dawn. "Can I help you?" Dawn asked. Sometimes people wanted her help finding a specific book, and she was usually able to point them to at least the section.

"Yeah, sorry, this might be a weird question..." The woman was clutching a book to her chest. Dawn had definitely seen her before, but that wasn't saying much. She saw almost every Chatoyant College student at least once a semester, and when she'd worked overnight shifts during finals week last semester, she felt as though she'd seen all the ones she'd missed during the rest of the year.

At least this woman was clearly not a faerie.

"I'll do my best to answer."

The woman's eyes widened a little. "Oh, it's not about library stuff. Sorry. But you know that Christy girl, right?"

Christy? Dawn knew she was staring blankly, but she couldn't formulate an answer right away. She was sure the name Christy sounded familiar, but she couldn't place it.

Obviously seeing Dawn's confusion, the other woman clarified. "I saw you visit her once. In Mary Thomas."

"Oh, right. Of course. What about her?" Dawn was simultaneously relieved and anxious that the girl's explanation had helped her place the name. Christy was Elrath's human alter ego. She hoped he hadn't found a new way to pull young women in and seduce them with a false face and form.

"I just wanted to know, is she autistic or something? Is there anything I can do to help? She never talks to anybody and Professor Jayasuriya says she doesn't even use email."

Dawn was staring blankly again. Why was this girl asking about this now? Did she think "Christy" suddenly had friends who could be asked about these things? And more importantly, what on earth could Dawn say?

A faerie like Elrath, who didn't understand how to integrate into human society, might potentially be diagnosed as autistic if he went to a psychiatrist. But Dawn didn't really know if that was true, she couldn't diagnose him herself, and she couldn't think why it would matter to anyone else. It certainly wouldn't be fair to autistic people to say that "Christy" was autistic without a diagnosis.

What would Elrath want her to say? He'd probably want her to make an excuse and smooth it over. He did not want to draw attention to himself.

Not that she really cared what he thought. The only person who deserved an honest answer was this nice girl, who apparently wanted to help him.

"I have no idea," Dawn said. "I don't honestly know hi—her that well. I agree that she's a little strange, but I think she's happy the way she is. She doesn't need help."

The blonde woman nodded, but her mouth was a little twisted to the side in skepticism. "Are you sure?"

"No, I'm not sure," Dawn said, shrugging. "You know where she lives, right? Why don't you ask her yourself?"

"Well, she's pretty rude when I try."

"I think she can take care of herself." Dawn put her hands on the cart handle. "She's graduating at the end of this semester."

"Okay, thanks anyway." The girl shrugged and turned away.

Dawn returned to her shelving, wondering what on earth that conversation had really been about.

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